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UW Recognized in Princeton Review’s Best Value College Rankings

The Princeton Review released The Best Value Colleges rankings this month and the 天美影视传媒 Seattle continues to be recognized as one of the best colleges in the U.S. The Best Value College rankings considered schools with demonstrated excellence in areas such as academics, financial aid, career prospects, and student experience.

In compiling The Best Value Colleges list, The Princeton Review considered more than 40 data points.听 The data points include academic outcomes, cost, financial aid, debt, graduation rates, and career and salary outcomes for alumni.听 Out of 650 schools considered, 209 schools made the rankings, which the Princeton Review commended as

鈥溾ruly the most exceptional in the nation at delivering great academics, affordable cost, and great career foundations.听 We strongly recommend and salute the colleges we present here for all they do to help their students with need afford to attend them while delivering an amazing college experience that鈥檚 worth every penny.鈥1

Among public institutions, the 天美影视传媒 Seattle was rated #16 on the list of Top 50 Best Value Colleges, up from #18 in 2021.听 The Best Value Colleges list considers seven categories in its ranking: overall value, value for students without financial aid, alumni network activity, internship accessibility, career placement, financial aid, and schools making an impact.听 Of the seven categories that went into the Best Value Colleges list, the 天美影视传媒 Seattle ranked in the top 20 in four categories.

When it comes to value, the 天美影视传媒 Seattle was recognized for providing a great return on investment for students.听 This year, the UW Seattle placed #11 on the list of Top 20 Best Schools for Internships, highlighting the multitude of career training opportunities students have access to.听 Additionally, the UW Seattle placed #16 on the list of Top 20 Best Career Placement in recognition of its career support services and salary outcomes for alumni.

Finally, the 天美影视传媒 Seattle was also recognized for engaging students in important work in the community and beyond.听 This year the UW Seattle placed #5 on the list of Top 20 Schools for Making an Impact.

 

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Income Share Agreement Update

Income Share Agreements (ISAs) have grown in popularity in recent years. They have been lauded by some as a solution to the student debt crisis, and criticized by others for further complicating the education finance market. Given the continued interest in ISAs, we have updated our 2016 brief on the topic. Here are some key takeaways:

  • While our 2016 brief compared ISAs to the federal Income Based Repayment (IBR) plan, it is now clear that ISAs听typically supplement subsided loans rather than replace them, and are thus better compared to private loans than public loans.
  • More colleges and universities have begun offering ISAs directly, as have more coding academics and other non-traditional institutions.
  • Some members of the Washington state legislature introduced a bill that would create an ISA pilot program and establish ISA regulations for Washington state. There continues to be interest in ISAs on a federal level but also within our state.

For more information and to read the updated brief, please see our OPB Briefs page.

2019 Higher Education Trends

As the higher education landscape continues to change and evolve in the United States, below are some select national and state trends driving higher education policy and innovation in recent years. The Office of Planning & Budgeting (OPB) continues to monitor these, and other, trends. This list was curated using multiple sources, including recent news articles and blogs, recent state-level legislation, and higher education trends analyses from The Brookings Institution and The Chronicle of Higher Education.

1. College Affordability

College affordability continues to dominate the national conversation around higher education. This year, the to make college more accessible and affordable for Washington families. Read more about the proposal in OPB鈥檚 brief on the legislature鈥檚 final compromise 2019-21 state budgets.

Additionally, many of the Democratic candidates for president in 2020 have released higher education policy proposals to address college affordability. These to increase funding for Pell Grants, to create 鈥渇ree college鈥 using state-federal partnerships, expand student loan forgiveness, and increase dedicated funding for Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and other Minority-Serving Institutions (MSIs).

2. Changing Student Profiles

According to the , 38 percent of all undergraduates are older than 25. Traditional college students 鈥 18- to 21-year-olds who attend school full-time 鈥 now only make up about a third of the college population.

Students are also increasingly taking on additional responsibilities while in school. According to , 85 percent of students are working in paid employment while studying. Lumina also reports that students work, on average, 19 hours per week.

3. Integrating Data

A from the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators, Association for Institutional Research, and Educause found that 鈥渕ost institutions are investing in data and analytics projects, but few are measuring the resulting costs.鈥

The report found that colleges are using data in more ways as they modernize and manage programs to show returns on student and state investments. Studies of students鈥 academic progress and success are the leading types of data projects. Many institutions are conducting several types of student success studies annually. However, nearly one fourth of institutions are not collecting usable business and systems-level data and few institutions are systematically collecting, integrating, and using their data.

4. Changes in Admissions

Last year, the University of Chicago that it would no longer require applicants to submit SAT or ACT scores, the most-selective institution ever to adopt a test-optional policy. Today, have adopted similar policies.

As colleges and universities continue to use data to better understand how their students perform, they become less reliant on test scores. According to the , 鈥渙n many campuses, deep dives into enrollment data have helped admissions offices determine which pieces of information they collect from applicants actually help them predict a variety of student outcomes, such as first-year grades and progress toward a degree.鈥 The University of Chicago 鈥渇ound that ACT and SAT scores didn鈥檛 tell it much about who would succeed and who would struggle.鈥

5. Open-Access Research

Global advocates are for publicly funded research to be available through open-access sites, rather than behind paywalls of subscription-based journals. Over the last few years, the movement has gained momentum at increasing cost to publishers. In 2018, said it would not subscribe to a publisher鈥檚 journals in one bundled deal. This year, the cancelled its contract with Elsevier, one of the biggest academic publishers in the world. The University of Iowa also a new open-source online journal, providing open access to the research and creative scholarship of the university.

This debate has some immediate consequences for academics and researchers, who will lose access to journals unless schools renegotiate with publishers. The University of California attempted to mitigate some of these consequences by alternative methods to access publications.

听6.听Transnational Students

According to , the number of American students enrolling at foreign colleges is expected to grow from 2.3 million student in 2015 to 6.9 million in 2030. This trend is attributed to multiple causes, including 鈥渉igher ambitions and investments for world-class universities鈥 and 鈥渁ccelerated growth of global, multi-national networks.鈥

However, in the United States, the number of new international student enrollments is declining. Inside Higher Ed that, 鈥淣ew enrollments fell 6.3 percent at the undergraduate level, 5.5 percent at the graduate level, and 9.7 percent at the non-degree level from 2016-17 to 2017-18.鈥 While , increasing by 1.5 percent in 2018, there is 听that new U.S. immigration policies might have long-term impacts on international enrollment.

7. Online Enrollment

Online courses continue to become more popular in the United States. In 2016-17, , while the number of students who took at least some of their courses online grew by 5.7 percent. Over the last 15 years, online enrollment has .

However, a from George Mason University claims that the growth in online enrollment has been 鈥渄isproportionately large in the for-profit sector.鈥 Further, 鈥渙nline coursework has contributed to increasing gaps in educational success across socioeconomic groups while failing to improve affordability.鈥

8. Online Program Managers

As online enrollments rise, online program managers (OPMs) are working with colleges and universities to provide online options for students. contract with institutions of higher education to create, market, and recruit for online degree and non-degree programs. In return, from the online programs offered at public colleges and universities.

College and universities like Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania, and the University of North Carolina already provide online programs through OPMs. Purdue University chose to Kaplan University in 2017 to directly expand its online presence.

Conclusion

Higher education continues to adapt to new technologies and a changing global environment. This blog represents just some of the most recent changes, and there are many other challenges and opportunities for American colleges and universities. As institutions seek to balance the status quo with contemporary shifts, their flexibility to adapt to changing circumstances will be a key element in determining their future success.

OPB Brief on Published Price vs. Net Price – 2019 update

The听2019 update of the听Published Price vs. Net Price brief is now available on our , and reflects the newest available data.听 The brief includes sector-wide data on trends in published price and net price for public and private four-year colleges and institutions, a description of how declining state investment in higher education has spurred tuition increases, and a table comparing the UW鈥檚 net price for resident undergraduates receiving grant or scholarship aid to its听U.S. News & World Report听top 25 research university peers.

UW Fast Facts 2019 鈥 Now Available!

The 2019 edition of UW Fast Facts is now available. You can find it on the听OPB website听under the UW Data tab, and in the Quicklinks bar on the right. You can also access it directly at.

A special thank you to OPB鈥檚 Institutional Analysis team, the Marketing & Communications team, and to our partners around the UW for their work to gather, verify, and crosscheck data; format the document; and pull it all together!

UW’s Adopted FY19 Operating Budget and Tuition Rates

On June 7, the Board of Regents adopted the . The budget includes final 2018-19 tuition rates and expected revenue and proposed expenditures by budget area. Annual and quarterly tuition and fee schedules have been posted. Supplementary documents听can be found on OPB’s Annual Budgets page.

In conjunction with the FY19 Operating Budget, OPB has updated the estimated 2018-19 cost of attendance for 1st year UW undergraduates with estimated student expenses across UW’s three campuses for:听 tuition, mandatory student fees, room & board, books, personal expenses, and transportation. A PDF version is also . Please note that students often pay far less than the amounts shown after accounting for grant and scholarship aid.听Please visit the Office of Student Financial Aid听website for more information regarding student budgets and net price.

New OPB Briefs: Published Price vs. Net Price, Differential Tuition, and Activity Based Budgeting

OPB has released two new briefs.

The is an updated version of a brief we posted in June, reflecting the newest available data.听 The brief includes sector-wide data on trends in published price and net price for public and private four-year colleges and institutions, a description of how declining state investment in higher education has spurred tuition increases, and a table comparing the UW鈥檚 net price for resident undergraduates receiving grant or scholarship aid to its U.S. News & World Report top 25 research university peers.

OPB also has a new brief on policy and programmatic trends for in higher education, and a recent brief on the used at the UW and other institutions.

UW Fast Facts 2018 鈥 Now Available!

The 2018 edition of UW Fast Facts is now available. You can find it on the OPB website under the UW Data tab, and in the 天美影视传媒 bar on the right.

A special thank you to OPB鈥檚 Institutional Data & Analysis team, the Marketing & Communications team and to our partners around the UW for their work to gather, verify and crosscheck data; format the document; and pull it all together.

Washington Guaranteed Education Tuition Program Reopens after Two Year Freeze

According to a , Washington鈥檚 Guaranteed Education Tuition (GET) program officially reopened on November 1. The GET program is a college-savings program. Under GET, families purchase GET units, currently valued at $113, to prepay the cost of tuition. GET account holders are guaranteed that 100 units will cover one year of full-time, undergraduate, resident tuition and fees at Washington鈥檚 most expensive public university at any point in the future.

In July 2015, the GET Committee authorized a two-year delay in most new unit sales, given the legislature鈥檚 decision to decrease resident undergraduate tuition at public institutions. During this time, GET was required to complete a to evaluate its future. The GET Committee voted to reopen the program and to 鈥渞ebase鈥 all existing accounts. Customers who held accounts prior to the freeze were given additional units because the unit payout value was reset to reflect current, lower, tuition. GET is now available to people who want to start new accounts and those who want to continue buying GET units.

The legislatively mandated study also tasked the GET Committee with looking into implementing other college savings options, such as a 鈥529鈥 college savings plan (which refers to Section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code). As a result of that effort, a new 529 savings plan, to be offered alongside GET, is currently .

Two New OPB Briefs: Resident Undergraduate Tuition Trends and Net Price

OPB has released two new briefs.

The focuses on trends in Resident Undergraduate (RUG) tuition rates and state funding environments across the United States, based on the most recent 鈥鈥 report, which is released by the College Board each year. The report identifies Washington as the only state to have lower RUG tuition and fee rates than it did five years ago.

The report serves as a basis for a deep dive into the funding environments of some other case studies. The brief looks at Louisiana, Florida and Ohio as comparisons to Washington, as they are the three other states whose legislatures retain RUG tuition setting authority. Despite this fact, each state has had a variety of outcomes regarding tuition policy. California and Maine are also highlighted as case study comparisons because they are the only two other states to show a decrease in tuition over the past five years, though theirs are due to inflation-adjusted tuition freezes.

The is an updated version of previous 鈥淧ublished Price vs. Net Price鈥 briefs, which reflects the newest available data. The brief includes sector-wide data on increases in published price and net price for public and private four-year colleges, a description of how declining state investment in higher education has spurred tuition increases, and a table comparing the UW鈥檚 net price net price for resident undergraduates receiving grant or scholarship aid to its U.S. News & World Report top 25 research university peers.

Finally, it is with subdued excited that to announce that听these two briefs and blog post will be my last contribution to OPB as an intern.听I am graduating tomorrow听from the Evans School of Public Policy and Governance,听while taking a job down at the State Capitol in Olympia. Thanks to all for reading!